India set to retain fastest growing economy tag

abhay

MPA (400+ posts)
[h=1]India set to retain fastest growing economy tag[/h]REUTERS UPDATED ABOUT 4 HOURS AGO





NEW DELHI: India probably gathered momentum to hold its ranking as the world's fastest growing large economy in the quarter through March, giving Prime Minister Narendra Modi more to celebrate after completing two years in office last week.


Modi swept to power promising to revitalise Asia's third-largest economy and, despite a dearth of private investment and shrinking exports, his policies are having some success as cooling inflation and lower interest rates have boosted consumer demand. A Reuters survey of economists expected data out on Tuesday will show India's gross domestic product grew 7.5 per cent year-on-year between January and March, faster than the previous quarter's 7.3pc.


"This 7.5pc growth, in a global slowdown environment, has a potential to pick up even more," Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said last week in general comments about the trends.


India's upbeat outlook contrasts with neighbouring China, where growth slipped to 6.7 in the first quarter - the slowest posted by the world's second largest economy in seven years.


Given the dim prospects for a boost from exports, Moody's Investors Service said a recovery in private investment would be needed if India's upturn was going to last.


"Combined with the fact that external demand is likely to remain lacklustre, a sustained improvement in domestic private investment would be required for the growth momentum to be sustained," the rating agency's analysts wrote in a note. Meantime, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is widely expected to keep its policy interest rate on hold at a scheduled policy review on June 7 as it waits for banks to fully pass on the previous the benefits of earlier cuts to borrowers.


Consumers, particularly in urban areas, have been encouraged by the lower rates. Sales of passenger cars and two-wheelers are growing at a double-digit pace. Sales of new residential units recovered in the last quarter, snapping a falling trend.


Personal loans that include loans for durable goods, housing and education are growing at a rate of 19pc year-on-year, while credit card loans are growing at a 24pc clip.


With good rains forecast this summer, the farm sector is set to get a fillip after two successive years of drought. That bodes well for depressed rural demand.


Impending increases in wages and pensions of government employees are also expected to underpin consumer spending.
[h=4]Challenges[/h]As part of his strategy to boost business and generate jobs, Modi has accelerated public spending on road construction, laying new power lines and upgrading the rail network.


He has also lifted caps on foreign investments in sectors such as insurance and defence manufacturing.
Still, an upturn in private capital investment remains elusive.


Festering bad loans have made banks wary of fresh lending, forcing cash-strapped firms to keep a lid on capital outlays and, in any case, many factories are still running well below capacity.


External uncertainties, meanwhile, are on the rise. Chances of United States interest rates going up, Britain voting to leave the European Union, and China's economy worsening all pose risks for emerging markets like India.
The South Asian nation has benefited massively from cheap crude over the past two years as its oil import bill halved, inflation fell and public finances improved.


But, economists reckon oil's recent rally above $50 a barrel could knock 20-30 basis points off the growth rate, while boosting the inflation rate by up to 60 basis points.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1261818/india-set-to-retain-fastest-growing-economy-tag
 

miafridi

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Congratulations from us. But Kindly don't be jealous of Pakistan and china CPEC strategy and as well and don't put hurdles in its completion. It will complete no doubt with or without your troublemaking, so why not let it happen and try to push your economy even further by taking advantage from it?
 

abhay

MPA (400+ posts)
Congratulations from us. But Kindly don't be jealous of Pakistan and china CPEC strategy and as well and don't put hurdles in its completion. It will complete no doubt with or without your troublemaking, so why not let it happen and try to push your economy even further by taking advantage from it?

sir you are a reasonable guy, so I suggest you to watch this video before coming to any conclusion

 

Raiwind-Destroyer

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
52984608.jpg
 

Ahud1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
[h=2]India set to retain fastest growing Prostitution economy tag[/h]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_in_India
Legal status of prostitution across Asia.
Prostitution legal and regulated

Prostitution (the exchange of sex for money) is legal, but organized activities such as brothels andpimping are illegal; prostitution is not regulated
Prostitution illegal
No data



sir you are a reasonable guy, so I suggest you to watch this video before coming to any conclusion

 

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
[h=1]If Indian economy is really growing 7.4%, why is consumer sentiment at 3-year low?[/h]The 75 basis points cut in rates this year doesn’t seem to be good enough to boost demand and convince consumers that things will improve

294






Subscribe to our newsletter.


Livemint


consumer-kwdF--621x414@LiveMint.jpg

The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/MintIndian consumers are turning increasingly pessimistic about the economic recovery. The MNI India Consumer Sentiment Indicator, from Deutsche Borse, fell to a three-year low in September, suggesting that demand continues to be lacklustre. That sentiment is completely out of sync with the rosy estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term.
“Seen through the eyes of our survey respondents… the short- to medium-term outlook looks less compelling, with consumer confidence at a record low and little sign of a quick turnaround, ” said MNI chief economist Philip Uglow.
Simply put, the 75 basis points rate cut that happened from January to September wasn’t good enough to boost demand and convince consumers that things will improve. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.

It’s not just consumer sentiment that is pessimistic. Expectations for business conditions improving one year from now fell to their lowest since September 2013, when India was battling a sharply depreciating rupee. Besides, consumers were the least optimistic about their household finances, with both current and future measures of personal finances falling to record lows.
This level of pessimism ties in with other indicators as well. For instance, the Nikkei Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for India shows there has been no improvement in manufacturing employment since the Narendra Modi government took charge at the Centre.
In September-end, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut rates by another 50 basis points to boost demand. It remains to be seen whether it will boost the much-needed confidence.
“So far the rate cuts have had little impact, with consumers particularly concerned about their finances. The recent cut in the policy rate by RBI should help, although for now our survey suggests that household spending will remain capped,” said

http://www.livemint.com/Money/XGY7A...lly-growing-74-why-is-consumer-sentiment.html
 

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
http://www.livemint.com/Money/XGY7AWl1fNfNEsMWe0PMFO/If-economy-is-really-growing-74-why-is-consumer-sentiment.html …


The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint
Indian consumers are turning increasingly pessimistic about the economic recovery. The MNI India Consumer Sentiment Indicator, from Deutsche Borse, fell to a three-year low in September, suggesting that demand continues to be lacklustre. That sentiment is completely out of sync with the rosy estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term.

“Seen through the eyes of our survey respondents… the short- to medium-term outlook looks less compelling, with consumer confidence at a record low and little sign of a quick turnaround, ” said MNI chief economist Philip Uglow.

Simply put, the 75 basis points rate cut that happened from January to September wasn’t good enough to boost demand and convince consumers that things will improve. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.

It’s not just consumer sentiment that is pessimistic. Expectations for business conditions improving one year from now fell to their lowest since September 2013, when India was battling a sharply depreciating rupee. Besides, consumers were the least optimistic about their household finances, with both current and future measures of personal finances falling to record lows.

This level of pessimism ties in with other indicators as well. For instance, the Nikkei Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for India shows there has been no improvement in manufacturing employment since the Narendra Modi government took charge at the Centre.

In September-end, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut rates by another 50 basis points to boost demand. It remains to be seen whether it will boost the much-needed confidence.

“So far the rate cuts have had little impact, with consumers particularly concerned about their finances. The recent cut in the policy rate by RBI should help, although for now our survey suggests that household spending will remain capped,” said Uglow.
 

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)







WHATSAPP

133 COMMENTS

email.png
EMAIL

PRINT



56b43b56cb388.jpg
Vendors work as they wait for customers at a garment store in a market in Mumbai, India, February 4, 2016. ─ Reuters

56b43b5646b44.jpg
Labourers works at the construction site of a residential building in Mumbai, India. ─ Reuters

56b43b56cb388.jpg
Vendors work as they wait for customers at a garment store in a market in Mumbai, India, February 4, 2016. ─ Reuters

56b43b5646b44.jpg
Labourers works at the construction site of a residential building in Mumbai, India. ─ Reuters






MUMBAI: From rural motorbike sales to rail freight, economists and even the central bank are devising their own ways to measure Indian growth.
Their verdict? It's a good deal weaker than official data showing India to be the world's most dynamic big economy.
Doubts about the accuracy of India's gross domestic product (GDP) figures persist a year after its statisticians unveiled new readings they say better capture value addition down the goods and services supply chain.
Under the new methodology, economists expect India will report GDP growth of 7.3 per cent on Monday for the October-December quarter, according to a Reuters poll.
That's a touch slower than the previous quarter but comfortably surpasses the 6.8pc growth posted by China.
While that number appears strong, the lack of a historical series ─ still in the works ─ makes it hard to conclude that Asia's third-largest economy is doing well at a time when firms report poor sales, bank lending is slow and investment is weak.
"It doesn't feel like we are growing at 7-8 percent," said one official familiar with the Reserve Bank of India's research methods.
Like other economists, the RBI is now turning to hybrid models that mix elements of the old and new GDP methods to get a better feel for the underlying health of the economy.
The RBI looks at two-wheeler sales, car sales, rail freight, and consumer goods sales in rural areas "to get a better understanding of the ground realities", this official said.
The new data is a headache too for Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who faces tough choices in his Feb 29 budget over whether to hike borrowing and spending to compensate for the sluggish private sector.
[h=4]'India not the fastest growing economy in the world'[/h]By its own proprietary measure, Ambit Capital estimates the economy may have grown an annualised 5 to 6pc in the October-December quarter.
“India is not the fastest growing economy in the world,” said Ritika Mankar Mukherjee, an Ambit economist in Mumbai.
"No matter how you cut it, while there are certain segments of the economy holding up such as IT or e-commerce, large parts of the economy are actually slowing down."
Economists have drawn on techniques used by colleagues covering China, where GDP figures are widely suspected to have been smoothed for years by its communist rulers to underpin popular faith in their economic stewardship.
Ambit looks at criteria such as motor vehicle sales, power demand, and imports of capital goods to determine the real rate of expansion.
Meanwhile, Citigroup has developed a heat map of 18 economic activities including two-wheeler sales, air traffic, and diesel sales.
Downbeat assessments of growth would more closely correspond with trends under the old GDP calculation method that until a year ago showed India experiencing the longest spell of sub-5pc growth in a quarter of a century.
The slowdown is especially pronounced in rural areas, which have suffered two consecutive dry years.
"Demand is very weak because farmers' income has been squeezed by drought," said a Mahindra and Mahindra tractor dealer in Aurangabad, in the state of Maharashtra, who reckons his sales are down more than 20pc from a year ago.
[h=4]'New GDP data captures efficiency'[/h]Ashish Kumar, who recently retired as the head of India's statistics office, says economists are using the wrong gauges to understand data that measures value addition.
"You have to understand that the new GDP data essentially captures efficiency," he told Reuters. "Comparing it with volume-based indicators would be a mistake."
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan has also endorsed the new GDP readings, saying sliding input costs are offsetting shrinking corporate revenues and inflating value-addition.
Put more simply, sales may be slow but profits are rising.
Still, the statistics office is readying tools to better capture services sector data for GDP calculations and supplement it with employment generation data.
"Once we have all these data points, we will get a better picture," said Kumar.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1237580


 

abhay

MPA (400+ posts)
GDP grows at 7.9% in Q4, may record 8% growth this fiscal

PTI | May 31, 2016, 08.15 PM IST



New Delhi, May 31 () Gaining momentum, economy grew by 7.9 per cent in March quarter to consolidate India's position as the fastest growing major economy with a five-year high growth rate of 7.6 per cent for the full fiscal on robust manufacturing growth.

Enthused by the impressive numbers for 2015-16, as against 7.2 per cent in previous fiscal, the government said the growth rate can go up to 8 per cent in the current fiscal on the back of good monsoon.

The farm sector also rebounded to the growth zone, as against a contraction in previous year, although the rate of expansion was low at 1.2 per cent in 2015-16.

The industry lauded the numbers and expressed hope that better monsoon and further reforms will help expand the economy at even a faster pace.

According to the data released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) today, the growth in manufacturing and farm sectors during the fourth quarter accelerated to 9.3 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respectively.

The core sector data in April too indicated momentum in the economic activity as it grew at rate of 8.5 per cent in the month, the highest in the last four years.

Commenting on GDP numbers, Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das said India can move towards 8 per cent growth with better agriculture production.

"The various measures that the government has been taking in the last couple of years is beginning to show results and overall there are greenshoots...this year hopefully with good monsoon we should look at a growth closer to 8 per cent," he said.

Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa said, "We should work towards seeing this (GDP growth) number grow. We are focusing on capital spending in infra and social spending."

"Growth rate in the 4th quarter of 2015-16 at 7.9% almost hits the magical 8% mark. Good days ahead," NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Arvind Panagariya tweeted.

The CSO has also revised the GDP growth rate for previous quarters of 2015-16 -- 7.5 per cent for April-June, 7.6 per cent for July-September and 7.2 per cent for October-December.

The 7.6 per cent growth rate for 2015-16 is the same as projected by the CSO in its advance estimates of national income earlier in February this year. (MORE) DP RR KKS CS BJ MR

http://profit.ndtv.com/news/economy...ts-gdp-growth-to-improve-to-8-in-fy17-1414095
 

abhay

MPA (400+ posts)







WHATSAPP

133 COMMENTS

email.png
EMAIL

PRINT



56b43b56cb388.jpg
Vendors work as they wait for customers at a garment store in a market in Mumbai, India, February 4, 2016. ? Reuters

56b43b5646b44.jpg
Labourers works at the construction site of a residential building in Mumbai, India. ? Reuters

56b43b56cb388.jpg
Vendors work as they wait for customers at a garment store in a market in Mumbai, India, February 4, 2016. ? Reuters

56b43b5646b44.jpg
Labourers works at the construction site of a residential building in Mumbai, India. ? Reuters





MUMBAI: From rural motorbike sales to rail freight, economists and even the central bank are devising their own ways to measure Indian growth.
Their verdict? It's a good deal weaker than official data showing India to be the world's most dynamic big economy.
Doubts about the accuracy of India's gross domestic product (GDP) figures persist a year after its statisticians unveiled new readings they say better capture value addition down the goods and services supply chain.
Under the new methodology, economists expect India will report GDP growth of 7.3 per cent on Monday for the October-December quarter, according to a Reuters poll.
That's a touch slower than the previous quarter but comfortably surpasses the 6.8pc growth posted by China.
While that number appears strong, the lack of a historical series ? still in the works ? makes it hard to conclude that Asia's third-largest economy is doing well at a time when firms report poor sales, bank lending is slow and investment is weak.
"It doesn't feel like we are growing at 7-8 percent," said one official familiar with the Reserve Bank of India's research methods.
Like other economists, the RBI is now turning to hybrid models that mix elements of the old and new GDP methods to get a better feel for the underlying health of the economy.
The RBI looks at two-wheeler sales, car sales, rail freight, and consumer goods sales in rural areas "to get a better understanding of the ground realities", this official said.
The new data is a headache too for Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who faces tough choices in his Feb 29 budget over whether to hike borrowing and spending to compensate for the sluggish private sector.
'India not the fastest growing economy in the world'

By its own proprietary measure, Ambit Capital estimates the economy may have grown an annualised 5 to 6pc in the October-December quarter.
“India is not the fastest growing economy in the world,” said Ritika Mankar Mukherjee, an Ambit economist in Mumbai.
"No matter how you cut it, while there are certain segments of the economy holding up such as IT or e-commerce, large parts of the economy are actually slowing down."
Economists have drawn on techniques used by colleagues covering China, where GDP figures are widely suspected to have been smoothed for years by its communist rulers to underpin popular faith in their economic stewardship.
Ambit looks at criteria such as motor vehicle sales, power demand, and imports of capital goods to determine the real rate of expansion.
Meanwhile, Citigroup has developed a heat map of 18 economic activities including two-wheeler sales, air traffic, and diesel sales.
Downbeat assessments of growth would more closely correspond with trends under the old GDP calculation method that until a year ago showed India experiencing the longest spell of sub-5pc growth in a quarter of a century.
The slowdown is especially pronounced in rural areas, which have suffered two consecutive dry years.
"Demand is very weak because farmers' income has been squeezed by drought," said a Mahindra and Mahindra tractor dealer in Aurangabad, in the state of Maharashtra, who reckons his sales are down more than 20pc from a year ago.
'New GDP data captures efficiency'

Ashish Kumar, who recently retired as the head of India's statistics office, says economists are using the wrong gauges to understand data that measures value addition.
"You have to understand that the new GDP data essentially captures efficiency," he told Reuters. "Comparing it with volume-based indicators would be a mistake."
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan has also endorsed the new GDP readings, saying sliding input costs are offsetting shrinking corporate revenues and inflating value-addition.
Put more simply, sales may be slow but profits are rising.
Still, the statistics office is readying tools to better capture services sector data for GDP calculations and supplement it with employment generation data.
"Once we have all these data points, we will get a better picture," said Kumar.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1237580





 

abhay

MPA (400+ posts)
http://www.livemint.com/Money/XGY7AWl1fNfNEsMWe0PMFO/If-economy-is-really-growing-74-why-is-consumer-sentiment.html …


The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint
Indian consumers are turning increasingly pessimistic about the economic recovery. The MNI India Consumer Sentiment Indicator, from Deutsche Borse, fell to a three-year low in September, suggesting that demand continues to be lacklustre. That sentiment is completely out of sync with the rosy estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) growth. The survey shows that not only are consumers worried about current conditions, they also don’t expect any improvement in the medium term.

“Seen through the eyes of our survey respondents… the short- to medium-term outlook looks less compelling, with consumer confidence at a record low and little sign of a quick turnaround, ” said MNI chief economist Philip Uglow.

Simply put, the 75 basis points rate cut that happened from January to September wasn’t good enough to boost demand and convince consumers that things will improve. One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.

It’s not just consumer sentiment that is pessimistic. Expectations for business conditions improving one year from now fell to their lowest since September 2013, when India was battling a sharply depreciating rupee. Besides, consumers were the least optimistic about their household finances, with both current and future measures of personal finances falling to record lows.

This level of pessimism ties in with other indicators as well. For instance, the Nikkei Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for India shows there has been no improvement in manufacturing employment since the Narendra Modi government took charge at the Centre.

In September-end, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut rates by another 50 basis points to boost demand. It remains to be seen whether it will boost the much-needed confidence.

“So far the rate cuts have had little impact, with consumers particularly concerned about their finances. The recent cut in the policy rate by RBI should help, although for now our survey suggests that household spending will remain capped,” said Uglow.



 

Mohan

Senator (1k+ posts)
It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

arun-jaitley-4802.jpg


India’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 7.6 per cent in 2015-16, powered by a rebound in farm output, and an improvement in electricity generation and mining production in the fourth quarter of the fiscal. Economic growth was estimated at 7.2 per cent in 2014-15.

The growth numbers for the last fiscal, which reinforces India’s position as the world’s fastest-growing large economy, came on the back of a strong 7.9 per cent growth in the last quarter of the fiscal.

http://indianexpress.com/article/bu...-now-the-fastest-growing-economy-in-the-world

The robust headline number, despite faltering private investment, weak capital goods growth and shrinking exports, has reinforced expectations that the RBI would keep its policy rate on hold at its next quarterly review next Tuesday. The central bank has already cut its policy repo rate by 150 basis points since January 2015, reducing it to 6.5 per cent — the lowest level in more than five years.

The strong 7.9 per cent growth in the fourth quarter comes at a time when China has reported a 6.7 per cent in the March quarter — its slowest growth in about seven years.

According to data released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO), the farm sector grew by 2.3 per cent from a year ago compared with a 1.0 per cent contraction in the December quarter. Mining grew 8.6 per cent in the March quarter, up from 7.1 per cent in the previous quarter.

Electricity, water and gas production growth surged to 9.3 per cent from 5.6 per cent in the December quarter.
The CSO, in a statement, said that it has revised the GDP data for the first three quarters released earlier from 7.6 per cent, 7.7 per cent and 7.3 per cent to 7.5 per cent, 7.6 per cent and 7.2 per cent, respectively.
Also, the growth of in the “agriculture, forestry and fishing”

sector was revised upwards to 1.2 per cent in 2015-16 as against 1.1 per cent in the advance estimates for the same period. “The upward revision is on account of the use of third advance estimates of crop production released by the Ministry of Agriculture,” it said.

The manufacturing sector’s growth was also revised downward to 9.3 per cent as against the growth rate of 9.5 per cent estimated earlier due to lower print of industrial output than estimated earlier. “The IIP of manufacturing registered a growth rate of 2 per cent during the whole year of 2015-16, as against the growth rate of 3.9 per cent used for compiling Advance Estimates.

Due to this change, the advance estimate growth of ‘manufacturing’ sector has been revised downwards to 9.3 per cent,” it added.
Growth of trade, hotels, transport, communication services has been revised downward to 9 per cent against 9.5 per cent estimated earlier, while financial, insurance and real estate sector grew at 10.3 per cent, same as projected earlier.

Upasna Bhardwaj, Economist, Kotak Mahindra Bank, said that private consumption has been holding up, mirroring some of the progress in high frequency data such as auto sales and the improving prospects of adequate monsoons.

“Another reason for the pickup in private consumption could be attributed to the heavy dividend payouts by corporates rather than increasing investment spending. Overall, the continued weakness in capital goods production and lack of capacity addition continues to remain a drag on growth. Going forward, better monsoons and seventh pay commission payouts are likely to remain supportive of consumption.

However, private capex will likely remain the missing link for a few more quarters with growth continuing to be heavily reliant on government spending. We, therefore, see a gradual uptick in growth next year,” she said.

The Economic Survey had projected a wide band of 7-7.75 per cent growth in 2016-17, boosted by normal monsoon projection. It had, however, cautioned that with the global slowdown likely to persist, chances of India’s growth rate in 2016-17 increasing significantly beyond 2015-16 levels were not very high.

The RBI, too, in its April monetary policy review, said a number of factors could impinge upon the growth outlook for the current fiscal such as slow investment recovery amid balance sheet adjustments of companies, weak revival of private investment demand and tepid external demand.

Source
 
Last edited by a moderator:

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

India Fudging GDP to Show Faster Growth Than China?



Indian government now claims that the country's GDP grew by 6.9% in 2013-14, well above the 4.7% growth the country had announced earlier.

Based on the latest methodology, it is claimed that the Indian economy expanded 7.5 percent year-on-year during the last quarter, higher than 7.3 percent growth recorded by China in the latest quarter, making it the fastest growing major economy in the world, according to Reuters. Is it wishful thinking to make Indian economy look better than China's?

[TABLE="class: tr-caption-container"]
[TR]
[TD="align: center"][/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD="class: tr-caption, align: center"]India GDP Revisions. Source: Financial Times[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]


The GDP revisions have surprised most of the nation's economists and raised serious questions about the credibility of government figures released after rebasing the GDP calculations to year 2011-12 from 2004-5. So what is wrong with these figures? Let's try and answer the following questions:

1. How is it possible that the accelerated GDP growth in 2013-14 occurred while the Indian central bankers were significantly jacking up interest rates by several percentage points and cutting money supply in the Indian economy?

2. Why are the revisions at odds with other important indicators such as lower industrial production and trade and tax collection figures? For the previous fiscal year, the governments index of industrial production showed manufacturing activity slowing by 0.8%. Exports in December shrank 3.8% in dollar terms from a year earlier.

3. How can growth accelerate amid financial constraints depressing investment in India? Indian companies are burdened with debt and banks are reluctant to lend.

4. Why has the total GDP for 2013-14 shrunk by about Rs. 100 billion in spite of upward revision in economic growth rate? Why is India's GDP at $1.8 trillion, well short of the oft-repeated $2 trillion mark?

Questions about the veracity of India's official GDP figures are not new. These have been raised by many top economists. For example, French economist Thomas Piketty argues in his best seller "Capital in the Twenty-First Century that the GDP growth rates of India and China are exaggerated. Picketty writes as follows:

"Note, too, that the very high official growth figures for developing countries (especially India and China) over the past few decades are based almost exclusively on production statistics. If one tries to measure income growth by using household survey data, it is often quite difficult to identify the reported rates of macroeconomic growth: Indian and Chinese incomes are certainly increasing rapidly, but not as rapidly as one would infer from official growth statistics. This paradox-sometimes referred to as the "black hole" of growth-is obviously problematic. It may be due to the overestimation of the growth of output (there are many bureaucratic incentives for doing so), or perhaps the underestimation of income growth (household have their own flaws)), or most likely both. In particular, the missing income may be explained by the possibility that a disproportionate share of the growth in output has gone to the most highly remunerated individuals, whose incomes are not always captured in the tax data." "In the case of India, it is possible to estimate (using tax return data) that the increase in the upper centile's share of national income explains between one-quarter and one-third of the "black hole" of growth between 1990 and 2000. "





 

nepali.nationalist

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

Riaz Haq said...Even the Indian RBI’s Rajan is Confused by India’s New GDP Numbers

India’s statistics ministry dropped a bombshell revision of recent GDP data Friday evening, provoking some head-scratching among economists trying to make sense of the incredible (in both senses of the word) new numbers. Growth of 6.9% in the 2014 fiscal year instead of 4.7%!

Had we all been “horribly wrong” about the Indian economy? Was the previous, Congress party-led government voted out on specious premises? Were the data fudged?

On Tuesday, Raghuram Rajan kept a cooler head.

“I don’t want to say anything about the numbers until we understand them better,” the Reserve Bank of India governor told reporters after announcing his decision to hold the policy interest rate at 7.75%. He said it would be “premature to take a strong view” based on the updated data. The central bank also kept its forecast for GDP growth for the year that ends next month at 5.5%—and, notably, continued to report the forecast using the old base year.

GDP growth in a year that ended nearly 11 months ago might not be the most immediately pertinent data point for deciding today’s monetary policy. But Mr. Rajan’s hesitation about embracing the new figures at least shows that policy makers aren’t junking their old narratives about the economy until the new GDP methodology yields a more-complete picture of recent trends.

Mr. Rajan, like others, pointed to the preponderance of other data that show continued stagnation that year: falling imports, sluggish auto sales. “We find it hard to see the economy as rollicking in 2013-14,” he said.

“I am puzzled by the new GDP growth numbers,” said Arvind Subramanian, the government’s chief economic adviser, in an interview with the Business Standard newspaper. He noted that the year that ended March 2014 was a crisis year for India, the year of the “taper tantrum,” capital outflows, the roiled rupee and RBI monetary tightening.

“I am not saying these [GDP] estimates are wrong in any way, only that these bear further scrutiny,” Mr. Subramanian said.

Of course, it’s not as if the RBI could have changed its forecasts on a dime even if it had wanted to. Most industrial-grade models used for such purposes rely on quarterly data to assess the dynamics of the economy.

Rudrani Bhattacharya of the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy in New Delhi said that with only the revised 2012-13 and 2013-14 annual growth rates available so far, the best she can do is use some simplistic assumptions to generate a quick-and-dirty revised forecast: “a mere scenario analysis,” she said.

Next Monday’s data release—when we’ll get GDP for each of the last three quarters as well as an advance estimate of growth for the whole fiscal year—is still the one to watch

http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/...-rajan-is-confused-by-indias-new-gdp-numbers/
 

MADdoo

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

Even if this is fake figure, i will appreciate them because they are smart enough to play with number at international level. This was BBC's hot topic today.

We all know india is growing very fast now, rate is 7.5 or 5.7, we dont know, but still they have facts to propaganda this. There is beautiful saying in Punjabi " Doodh hota hain to Jaman lagta hai, matlab doodh hoga to Dahi(Yogurt) banay ga" so they have something, that is why they can show a bigger profile.
 

bons

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

O paii, this is not an indian forum. Ja apna rasta le.
 
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

O paii, this is not an indian forum. Ja apna rasta le.

this is international forum .
we should take inspiration from everywhere , don't be jealous . we are far far behind .
 
Re: It's official: With March quarter GDP ending at 7.9%, India now fastest growing economy in the world

Even if this is fake figure, i will appreciate them because they are smart enough to play with number at international level. This was BBC's hot topic today.

We all know india is growing very fast now, rate is 7.5 or 5.7, we dont know, but still they have facts to propaganda this. There is beautiful saying in Punjabi " Doodh hota hain to Jaman lagta hai, matlab doodh hoga to Dahi(Yogurt) banay ga" so they have something, that is why they can show a bigger profile.

yes fully agree with you .
 

Back
Top